The 1984 UEFA Cup Final was an association football tie played on 9 May and 23 May 1984 to determine the champion of the 1983–84 UEFA Cup. The two-legged final was contested between Anderlecht of Belgium, who were defending champions, and Tottenham Hotspur of England. Tottenham won 4–3 on penalty kicks after the tie finished 2–2 on aggregate.[1]

1984 UEFA Cup final
Event1983–84 UEFA Cup
on aggregate
Tottenham Hotspur won 4–3 on penalties
First leg
Date9 May 1984
VenueConstant Vanden Stock Stadium, Brussels
RefereeBruno Galler (Switzerland)
Attendance38,000
Second leg
After extra time
Date23 May 1984
VenueWhite Hart Lane, London
RefereeVolker Roth (West Germany)
Attendance46,258
1983
1985

To date, this remains the most recent European honour won by Tottenham Hotspur. It would be another 35 years until Spurs reached another major European final, when they lost the Champions League Final in 2019 to Liverpool.

In 1997, it emerged that Anderlecht's passage to the final had involved the club's chairman paying a bribe totalling £27,000 to the referee for the semi-final against Nottingham Forest. A dubious penalty was awarded to Anderlecht, whilst a Forest goal was disallowed.[2]

Route to the final edit

Anderlecht Round Tottenham Hotspur
Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg Opponent Agg. 1st leg 2nd leg
  Bryne 4–1 3–0 (A) 1–1 (H) First round   Drogheda United 14–0 6–0 (A) 8–0 (H)
  Baník Ostrava 4–2 2–0 (H) 2–2 (A) Second round   Feyenoord 6–2 4–2 (H) 2–0 (A)
  Lens 2–1 1–1 (A) 1–0 (H) Third round   Bayern München 2–1 0–1 (A) 2–0 (H)
  Spartak Moscow 4–3 4–2 (H) 0–1 (A) Quarter-finals   Austria Wien 4–2 2–0 (H) 2–2 (A)
  Nottingham Forest 3–2 0–2 (A) 3–0 (H) Semi-finals   Hajduk Split 2–2 (a) 1–2 (A) 1–0 (H)

Match details edit

First leg edit

Anderlecht  1–1  Tottenham Hotspur
Olsen   85' Report

Overview (archive)

Overview
Miller   57'
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Anderlecht
 
 
 
 
 
 
Tottenham Hotspur
GK 1   Jacky Munaron
RB 3   Georges Grün
CB 2   Walter De Greef
CB 10   Morten Olsen (c)
LB 5   Michel De Groote
RM 8   Wim Hofkens
CM 6   Enzo Scifo
CM 7   René Vandereycken
LM 11   Kenneth Brylle
CF 9   Erwin Vandenbergh   82'
CF 4   Alexandre Czerniatynski   64'
Substitutes:
GK 12   Dirk Vekeman
MF 13   Per Frimann
FW 14   Franky Vercauteren   64'
MF 15   Arnór Guðjohnsen
MF 16   Frank Arnesen   82'
Manager:
  Paul Van Himst
 
GK 1   Tony Parks
RB 2   Danny Thomas
CB 4   Graham Roberts
CB 5   Paul Miller
LB 3   Chris Hughton
RM 10   Gary Stevens   81'
CM 6   Steve Perryman (c)   67'
CM 7   Micky Hazard
LM 11   Tony Galvin   71'
CF 9   Mark Falco
CF 8   Steve Archibald
Substitutes:
MF 12   Gary Mabbutt   81'
FW 14   Garth Crooks
MF 15   Richard Cooke
DF 16   Ian Culverhouse
GK 17   Ray Clemence
Manager:
  Keith Burkinshaw

Second leg edit

 
 
 
 
 
 
Tottenham Hotspur
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Anderlecht
GK 1   Tony Parks
RB 2   Danny Thomas
CB 4   Graham Roberts (c)
CB 5   Paul Miller   73'   77'
LB 3   Chris Hughton
RM 10   Gary Stevens   57'
CM 6   Gary Mabbutt   73'
CM 7   Micky Hazard
LM 11   Tony Galvin
CF 9   Mark Falco   70'
CF 8   Steve Archibald
Substitutes:
MF 12   Osvaldo Ardiles   73'
FW 14   Garth Crooks
DF 15   Mark Bowen
MF 16   Ally Dick   77'
GK 17   Ray Clemence
Manager:
  Keith Burkinshaw
 
GK 1   Jacky Munaron
RB 2   Georges Grün
CB 3   Walter De Greef
CB 10   Morten Olsen
LB 5   Michel De Groote
RM 8   Wim Hofkens
CM 9   Enzo Scifo
CM 7   René Vandereycken
LM 6   Franky Vercauteren (c)
CF 11   Frank Arnesen   42'   77'
CF 4   Alexandre Czerniatynski   103'
Substitutes:
FW 14   Kenneth Brylle   103'
FW 16   Arnór Guðjohnsen   77'
Manager:
  Paul Van Himst

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Pye, Steven (31 May 2019). "When Tottenham won their last European trophy – 35 years ago". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 May 2020.
  2. ^ "Forest sues Anderlecht over '84 bribery scandal". BBC Sport. 24 December 1997. Retrieved 9 February 2009.

External links edit